In-line application of solid lubricant to steel strip

ABSTRACT

A solid lubricant application procedure is combined in-line with a steel strip processing method which comprises processing steps upstream and downstream of the lubricant application procedure. The latter comprises applying the lubricant material in molten form or as a solution and may include temperature adjusting steps both upstream and downstream of the lubricant material-applying step. The space for incorporating the lubricant application procedure into the steel strip processing line is limited. The strip speed in the lubricant application procedure is synchronized with the strip speed normally attained in the steel strip processing method in the absence of an in-line lubricant application procedure. The steps of the lubricant application procedure are constrained to accommodate the space limits and strip speed synchronization requirement imposed on the lubricant application procedure when it is combined in-line with the steel strip processing method.

This is a division of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/234,541, filed Apr.28, 1994.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to the application of a solidlubricant on steel strip and more particularly to the combination of alubricant application procedure in-line with a method for processingsteel strip.

When a steel strip is subjected to a fabricating operation, such asstamping or drawing, it is desirable for the steel strip to have a filmof lubricant thereon, as that facilitates the fabricating operation.Generally, the lubricant film can be either solid or liquid, but solidlubricant films have advantages over liquid films, and solid lubricantfilms are preferred.

When a solid lubricant is applied to steel strip, the lubricant isapplied in the form of a liquid, either in molten form or as a solution.The solid lubricant application procedure can be in-line or external.In-line application refers to application during processing of the steelstrip in the steel mill, as distinguished from external application inwhich the solid lubricant is applied at an external processing lineseparate and apart from a steel mill processing line. Externalapplication requires transportation and handling (and the equipment andmanpower associated therewith) over and above that employed with in-lineprocessing, thereby substantially increasing the time, effort and moneyinvolved.

There are certain problems which must be overcome should one attempt toretrofit existing steel mill strip processing lines to incorporatein-line application of solid lubricant. One cannot merely incorporate aconventional external application procedure into an existing steel millprocessing line. This is because a conventional external applicationline can occupy a relatively large amount of space which is notavailable in existing steel mill strip processing lines. Moreover, inexisting steel mill strip processing lines, the steel strip moves alongthe processing line at a relatively rapid speed, and in-line solidlubricant application equipment desirably should be synchronized tooperate at the same speed. A solid lubricant application procedure notonly incorporates the step of applying the solid lubricant to thesurface of the steel strip, but also it generally incorporates a thermaltreatment step for the steel strip either upstream or downstream of thesolid lubricant-applying step, or both. In-line application of solidlubricant requires incorporating all of these processing steps (and theequipment for performing them) into the steel mill strip processingline, while (1) accommodating those steps and equipment to the spacelimitations in the steel mill strip processing line, (2) synchronizingthe speed of the lubricant application procedure to the relatively rapidspeed at which the steel mill strip processing line is operated and (3)allowing enough flexibility in the design of the solid lubricantapplication equipment to accommodate both hot melt and solution-basedsolid film lubricants.

Examples of solid lubricants for steel strip and of procedures forapplying the solid lubricant are described in Coduti, et al., U.S. Pat.No. 4,999,241 (wax type solid lubricant), Robbins, et al., U.S. Pat. No.5,151,297 (acrylic polymer solid lubricant) and Sech U.S. Pat. No.4,753,743 (wax type solid lubricant); the disclosures in all of theseU.S. patents are incorporated herein by reference.

The Coduti, et al. patent teaches preheating a steel strip to which awax lubricant is to be applied in molten form; the strip preheattemperature is 5° to 10° F. above the melting point of the wax. (Themelting point for wax lubricants is typically in the range 120°-150° F.(49°-66° C.)). The higher the strip preheat temperature, the moredifficult it is to accommodate the strip preheating step (and anysubsequent cooling step) (a) to the space limitations in the steel stripprocessing line and (b) to the strip speed synchronizing requirement,imposed upon the lubricant application procedure when one attempts tocombine that procedure in-line with a method for processing steel stripin an existing strip processing line.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention combines a solid lubricant application procedurewith a steel mill strip processing line. The handling, transportationand other drawbacks and disadvantages of an external solid lubricantapplication line are eliminated, and the problems associated with thespace limitations and strip speed synchronization requirement of thesteel mill processing line are overcome.

The steel mill processing line performs a multi-step method forprocessing a continuous steel strip and comprises performing at leastone processing step upstream of the solid lubricant applicationprocedure and another processing step downstream of the solid lubricantapplication procedure. The steel strip is moved in a downstreamdirection during these processing steps, and the speed of the movingsteel strip in the downstream processing step is synchronized with thestrip speed in the upstream processing step. This is a relatively rapidspeed, typically in excess of 200 ft./min. (61 m/min.), for example, anddepending upon the particular steel strip processing method one employs,the strip speed can be as high as 5,000 ft./min. (1524 m/min.).

The solid lubricant application procedure is performed in-line with thestrip processing method and applies, to the steel strip, a materialwhich forms a transparent film of solid lubricant on the steel strip.The lubricant application procedure comprises applying the film-formingmaterial to the moving steel strip, adjusting the temperature of themoving steel strip before the material is applied, or after the materialis applied, or both. The speed of the moving steel strip is synchronizedduring the lubricant application procedure with the strip speed employedin the strip-processing steps described above.

Because of space limitations in the steel mill processing line andbecause the speed of the strip during the lubricant applicationprocedure is synchronized with the relatively rapid speed of the movingsteel strip in the steel mill strip-processing steps, there is a limiton the time available for performing the material-applying andtemperature-adjusting steps of the lubricant application procedure. Inaccordance with the present invention, the performance of thematerial-applying and temperature-adjusting steps are constrained toaccommodate to the time limitations imposed by the space limitations andthe synchronizing step.

The solid lubricant employed in the lubricant application procedure canbe either a wax-type of lubricant or an acrylic polymer type oflubricant, for example. The steel mill processing steps are essentiallyconventional and can include, in addition to uncoiling and coilingsteps, a temper rolling step, an inspection step, and hot dip orelectrolytic metallic coating steps. In cases where the coating is zinc,the steel mill processing line can include a subsequent galvannealingstep.

As noted above, the lubricant application procedure can include atemperature adjusting step upstream and/or downstream of thematerial-applying step. The type of temperature-adjusting step and itsuse is dependent upon (a) the type of solid lubricant employed, (b) themanner in which the lubricant material is applied, and (c) which of thevarious steel strip-processing steps one employs in the steel millstrip-processing method. The upstream temperature-adjusting step, whenemployed, is generally a heating step. The downstreamtemperature-adjusting step can be a heating step or a cooling step. Allof the heating and cooling steps are performed sufficiently rapidly toaccommodate to the time limitations imposed by incorporating thelubricant application procedure in line with the steel strip processingmethod. These temperature-adjusting steps will be discussed more fullybelow in the Detailed Description.

Preferably the in-line solid lubricant application procedureincorporates provision for performing both upstream and downstreamtemperature-adjusting steps. This enables one to employ, asalternatives, either a wax-type solid lubricant or a polymer-type solidlubricant, in the same processing line.

The employment of an in-line lubricant application procedure inaccordance with the present invention does not require any change in thesteel strip processing method, either upstream or downstream of thelocation where the solid lubricant is applied. Moreover, the strip speedin the lubricant application procedure can be synchronized with thestrip speed in the steel strip processing method without substantiallydiminishing the strip speed normally attained in that method in theabsence of an in-line lubricant application procedure.

Other features and advantages are inherent in the invention claimed anddisclosed or will become apparent to those skilled in the art from thefollowing detailed description in conjunction with the accompanyingdiagrammatic drawings. Advantages resulting from a combination inaccordance with the present invention are applicable to both (a) anexisting steel mill strip processing line and (b) a new steel mill stripprocessing line.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating the combination of a steel stripprocessing method and an in-line solid lubricant application procedure,all in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention; and

FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating an in-line lubricant applicationprocedure in accordance with the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Referring initially to FIG. 1, there is illustrated a combination inaccordance with the present invention. The combination comprises (a) amulti-step method 11, 13 for processing a continuous steel strip 10 and(b) a solid lubricant application procedure 12 in line with thestrip-processing method, for applying, to steel strip 10, a materialwhich forms a transparent film of solid lubricant on the steel strip.The strip-processing method comprises performing at least one processingstep 11 upstream of lubricant application procedure 12 and performing atleast one processing step 13 downstream of the lubricant applicationprocedure. Steel strip 10 moves in a downstream direction duringprocessing steps 11 and 13. The speed of the moving steel strip indownstream processing step 13 is synchronized at 14 with the strip speedemployed in upstream processing step 11.

Lubricant application procedure 12 comprises three basic parts,illustrated in FIG. 2. These include a thermal pretreatment part 15performed upstream of a part 16 at which the lubricant material isapplied as a liquid, and part 16 is in turn performed upstream of athermal post-treatment part 17. The thermal pretreatment at 15 typicallymay comprise sensing the temperature of the moving steel strip beforethe lubricant material is applied at 16 and adjusting the temperature ofthe moving steel strip in response to the temperature sensing step. Thethermal post-treatment at 17 typically may comprise sensing thetemperature of the moving steel strip after the lubricant material isapplied at 16 and adjusting the temperature of the moving steel strip inresponse to that temperature sensing step. In a steel mill processingline performing steps 11 and 13, there is a limit on the amount of spaceavailable for incorporating the three parts 15-17 of lubricantapplication procedure 12 in-line.

Referring again to FIG. 1, the speed of the moving steel strip 10 duringthe lubricant application procedure 12 is synchronized at 14 with thestrip speed employed in strip-processing steps 11 and 13. As a result of(a) the synchronizing step described in the preceding sentence and (b)the space limitations in the processing line incorporating steps 11 and13, there is a limit on the time available for performing steps 15-17 oflubricant application procedure 12. Accordingly, the performance ofsteps 15-17 is constrained to accommodate to the time limit imposed bythe space limitations and the synchronizing step.

The solid lubricant applied to the steel strip can be a wax-typelubricant, examples of which are disclosed in the aforementioned Coduti,et al. and Sech U.S. patents. Alternatively, the solid lubricant can bea polymer type, examples of which are disclosed in the aforementionedRobbins, et al. U.S. patent. The following discussion will initiallydiscuss the lubricant application procedure employed when the solidlubricant is a wax type.

A wax-type lubricant may be applied as a liquid, either in a moltenstate or dissolved in a volatile solvent. Application in a molten stateis preferred because that does not involve the provision of ventilationequipment which is required when volatile solvents are employed.

Whether molten or in solution, the wax-type material may be applied as aliquid by employing one of the following techniques: three roll, reverseroll coating in which an applicator roll rotates in a direction which isthe reverse of the direction of the advancing strip, at the locationwhere the roll engages the strip; two roll, forward roll coating inwhich the applicator roll rotates in the same direction as the advancingstrip, at the location where the roll engages the strip; electrostaticspraying; air assisted spraying; and airless spraying. Roll coating mayemploy a gravure (patterned) pick-up roll surface or a smooth,patternless pick-up roll surface. (Liquid lubricant material isinitially applied to a pick-up roll from which the liquid is transferredto an applicator roll.) The techniques described above are allconventional expedients. Roll coating is preferred over spraying. Amongthe spraying techniques, electrostatic spraying is preferred. Examplesof some of these expedients and the advantages and disadvantages thereofare described in the aforementioned Coduti, et al. U.S. patent.

Roll coating provides the best control from the standpoint of uniformityof thickness of the solid lubricant film. Electrostatic sprayingproduces a uniform weight per unit area for the lubricant film, but auniform film thickness is difficult to obtain. Instead, the lubricantwill be present as hills or valleys. Where uniformity of thickness isnot a concern, and uniformity of weight per unit area is sufficient toaccommodate one's needs, electrostatic spraying may be employed.

The melting point of a wax-type lubricant is generally in the range120°-150° F. (49°-66° C.). Molten wax breaks down or decomposes at anelevated temperature, above its melting point, e.g. above 200° F. (93°C.). When molten wax is applied to a steel strip, the steel strip mustbe at a temperature high enough to allow the molten wax to adherethereto, and, of course, the steel strip should be at a temperaturebelow the decomposition temperature of the wax, i.e. below about 200° F.(93° C.). In accordance with the present invention, it has beendetermined that the steel strip can be at a temperature as low as about90° F. (32° C.) in order to obtain satisfactory adherence of the moltenwax.

When the molten wax lubricant is applied by applicator roll, the minimumtemperature to which the strip should be preheated, before the waxcoating is applied, is a strip temperature at which poor wax coatinglaydown is avoided. Poor wax coating laydown gives a non-uniformlubricant coating and is characterized by a visible coating patterncomprising a series of closely spaced, parallel lines extendingtransversely to the direction of strip movement. This pattern, called"chatter", is often accompanied by a squealing noise from the applicatorroll. Generally, poor wax coating laydown can be avoided by preheatingthe strip to a temperature above about 90°-95° F. (32°-35° C.). Thestrip preheat temperature for avoiding poor coating laydown on a givenstrip may vary with variations in solid lubricant composition and/orwith the characteristics of the lubricant application equipment andprocedure. If, at a given strip preheat temperature above 90° F., thelubricant coating still exhibits the above-described characteristics ofpoor wax coating laydown, the strip temperature can be increased byincrements of 5° or 10° F. until the aforementioned undesiredcharacteristics disappear.

In summary, the strip should be preheated to a temperature (a) aboveabout 90° F. and (b) at which poor wax coating laydown is avoided. Sucha preheating step, prior to applying molten wax lubricant by rollcoating, will provide for both coating adherence and coating uniformity.

When the molten wax lubricant is applied by roll coating, the steelstrip need not be heated above the melting point of the wax lubricant.The lower the strip preheat temperature, the easier it is to accommodatethe strip preheating step (and any subsequent cooling step) to (a) thespace limitations in the steel strip processing line and (b) the stripspeed synchronizing requirements, imposed upon the lubricant applicationprocedure when one attempts to combine that procedure in-line with amethod for processing steel strip in an existing strip processing line.

When the molten wax lubricant is applied by spraying, it may benecessary to preheat the strip to a temperature above the melting pointof the lubricant in order to assure that the entire surface of the stripis coated with lubricant. This is because, at a lower strip temperature,droplets of molten wax sprayed onto the strip surface may cool andsolidify before they have a chance to spread and merge with otherdroplets. At a strip temperature above the melting point of the waxlubricant, the entire strip surface can be coated with lubricant;however, there can still be non-uniformity in the thickness of the solidlubricant coating (i.e. lubricant hills and valleys).

As noted above in connection with FIG. 2, the temperature of the movingsteel strip is adjusted at 15 before the film-forming lubricant materialis applied at 16. If the temperature of the steel strip is too low, i.e.below the temperature at which the molten wax will adhere to the steelstrip or at which poor coating laydown disappears, then thetemperature-adjusting step comprises heating the strip prior tomaterial-applying step 16. If the temperature of the moving steel stripis too high, then, of course, temperature-adjusting step 15 comprises acooling step.

Generally, absent a hot-dip coating step or a galvannealing stepimmediately upstream of lubricant application procedure 12, the movingsteel strip will be relatively cool, so that temperature-adjusting step15 comprises a heating step. In such a case, the performance of theheating step is constrained by employing a non-emission heatingtechnique which preferably comprises either induction heating orinfra-red radiant heating, both of which are conventional expedients.Both of these techniques will heat the steel strip relatively rapidly,thereby minimizing the space requirements for the equipment utilized inthese heating techniques and allowing the speed of the strip movingthrough the lubricant application procedure to be synchronized with thespeed of the strip as the strip moves through the steel strip processingmethod upstream and downstream of the lubricant application procedure.Induction heating may be performed in a conventional induction heatingfurnace. Infra-red radiant heating employs electric filaments heated byresistance heating and composed of a material which creates lightwaveemissions heavily concentrated in the infra-red part of the emissionband.

Other heating expedients may be employed. One such expedient comprisesstraight conduction heating with hot rolls which engage the strip andheat it as the strip passes therebetween. Another expedient employs ablast of very turbulent, non-laminar air super-heated to a temperaturein the range 600°-900° F. (316°-482° C.). As used herein, the term"non-emission heating technique" includes all of the heating expedientsdescribed above.

After the lubricant application procedure, the steel strip is coiled.When the lubricant is applied as a molten wax, the lubricant must besolidified to a hard finish before coiling. In such a case, thetemperature-adjusting step at 17 (FIG. 2) comprises a cooling step. Moreparticularly, immediately after material-applying step 16, the strip ischilled to a temperature substantially below the melting point of thewax to rapidly solidify the wax before the strip is coiled. In order toaccommodate the space limitations in the steel strip processing line,and in order to synchronize the speed of the steel strip moving throughthe lubricant application procedure with the speed of the steel strip inthe strip processing method, the performance of the cooling step isconstrained by employing a refrigerated cooling medium comprising one ofthe following, for example: chilled air; chilled water; liquid nitrogenspray; and chilled rolls wherein a refrigerated cooling medium iscirculated through cooling channels in a pair of rolls which engage themoving strip therebetween.

The criterion for employing a given cooling (or heating) technique isthat it changes the temperature of the steel strip sufficiently rapidlyto accommodate to the time limit imposed by (a) the space limitations ofthe steel strip processing line and (b) the synchronization of the stripspeed in lubricant application procedure 12 with the strip speed inprocessing method 11, 13.

When the solid lubricant comprises a polymer rather than a wax-typelubricant, the lubricant is applied as a liquid in the form of anaqueous solution utilizing material-applying steps employing the sametechniques (e.g. rolling, spraying) described above in connection withapplying a wax-type lubricant.

When a polymer-type of solid lubricant is employed, the thermalpre-treatment 15 employed before the lubricant is applied as a liquid at16 is not so crucial as when the lubricant is applied in the form of awax. Nevertheless, depending upon the processing 11 to which the steelstrip has been subjected upstream of solid lubricant applicationprocedure 12, a thermal pre-treatment 15, as part of procedure 12, maybe desired, or required.

More particularly, when the lubricant is applied in the form of anaqueous solution, the steel strip should be at a temperature below thevaporization or decomposition temperature of the lubricant (asdistinguished from the vaporization temperature of the carrier liquid inwhich the lubricant is dissolved). Generally, unless the strip has beensubjected to a substantial temperature-raising procedure immediatelyupstream of lubricant application procedure 12, the steel strip willnormally be at a temperature below that at which the lubricantvaporizes. If not, then the strip should be subjected to a thermalpretreatment 15 in which the temperature of the strip is adjusted bychilling the strip to the desired temperature, employing a refrigeratedcooling medium, as discussed above in connection with the cooling stepemployed at 17 following the application of a molten wax-type lubricant.

Preferably, when the lubricant is applied in the form of an aqueoussolution, the strip should be at a temperature greater than 32° F. (0°C.) and up to a temperature in the range of about 60°-70° F. (16°-21°C.). If the steel strip has a temperature below 32° F., then it shouldbe subjected to a thermal pre-treatment 15 as part of lubricantapplication procedure 12. Such a treatment comprises adjusting thetemperature of the steel strip by heating, employing the heatingtechniques described above in connection with heating the steel stripimmediately before the lubricant is applied in the form of a molten wax.

After the lubricant is applied in the form of an aqueous solution, thestrip is subjected to a thermal-post treatment 17 which comprisesadjusting the temperature of the strip by heating the strip to atemperature substantially above the boiling point of water (212° F. or100° C.) but below the decomposition temperature of the lubricant, todrive off the water from the aqueous solution before the strip issubjected to a subsequent coiling step. Typically the strip should beheated at 17 to a temperature in the range 300°-400° F. (149°-204° C.).

As noted above, when the lubricant is applied in the form of an aqueoussolution, the lubricant is typically a polymer, e.g. an acrylic polymer.Accordingly, the heating step employed in the thermal-post treatment 17should not only dry the lubricant but also supply sufficient heat to thelubricant to cure (cross link) the polymer before the strip is coiled,without degrading the polymer. The temperature range described in thepreceding paragraph would generally suffice.

In case the lubricant is unintentionally overheated at 17, degradationcan be avoided by rapidly quenching, immediately downstream of 17, witha curtain of cold water. The drying step can be facilitated bypreheating the strip at 15 prior to the application of the lubricant inthe form of an aqueous solution. Although, in such a case, thepreliminary heating step at 15 heats the strip to a relatively lowtemperature (e.g merely up to 60°-70° F. or 16°-21° C.), step 15 doesprovide the strip with some sensible heat at least a part of which isretained during the lubricant material-applying step at 16. In doing so,step 15 reduces the amount of heat which must be supplied during thedrying step at 17 in order to vaporize the water in which the lubricantis dissolved. Because the amount of heat required to vaporize a givenamount of water is relatively high compared to other, more volatilesolvents, it can be desirable to impart heat to the strip at 15 forcarryover to station 17.

The strip can, of course, arrive at lubricant application procedure 12at an elevated temperature above that described three sentences above;this can be permitted so long as the strip temperature is below thedecomposition (vaporization) temperature of the lubricant in the aqueoussolution. If the strip is at a desired elevated temperature at the timeit arrives at temperature-adjusting station 15, pre-heating need not beemployed at 15. Generally, pre-heating must be employed only in thosecase where it is necessary to raise the temperature of the strip above32° F. (0° C.); such a situation would arise essentially only when thestrip has been stored in a relatively cold environment immediately priorto performance of the steel processing method with which the lubricantapplication procedure has been combined. This will be discussed morefully below in connection with a steel strip inspection method.

Further with respect to the performance of a post-heating step at 17,that heating step must accommodate (a) the space limitations of thesteel strip processing line at 13 and (b) synchronization of the speedof the moving strip, during lubricant application procedure 12, with thespeed of the steel strip during the steel strip processing method 11,13. Accordingly, the heating step at 17 is constrained by employing anon-emission heating technique; this was described above in connectionwith the pre-heating of the steel strip when the lubricant is applied inthe form of a molten wax (i.e. induction heating, infra-red radiantheating, etc.).

As noted above in connection with FIG. 1, lubricant applicationprocedure 12 is part of a combination including upstream processing step11 and downstream processing step 13. In such a combination, upstreamprocessing step 11 may comprise temper rolling, and downstreamprocessing step 13 may comprise coiling. In another such combination,upstream processing step 11 can comprise unwinding steel strip 10 from acoil, while downstream processing step 13 comprises: (1) simultaneously(a) inspecting for defects on the surface of the steel strip, throughthe transparent film of solid lubricant, and (b) inspecting thelubricant film, and then (2) coiling the inspected strip.

In either of the combinations described in the preceding paragraph, thelubricant may be applied in the form of a molten wax which is solid atroom temperature or in the form of an aqueous solution. When thelubricant is applied in the form of a molten wax, the steel strip willprobably require a heating step at 15, before the lubricant is appliedat 16, and a chilling step at 17 after the lubricant is applied. Both ofthese steps have been described above.

When the lubricant is applied in the form of an aqueous solution aheating step will be required at 17 after the lubricant has been appliedat 16, to boil off the water in which the lubricant is dissolved, etc.;all of this has been described above. It may also be necessary toperform a heating step at 15 before the lubricant in aqueous solution isapplied at 16; this would occur in those instances where (a) the steelstrip processing method employs either a temper rolling step or a stripinspection step at 11 and (b) the step performed at 11 is performed on acoil of steel strip which has been stored in a relatively coldenvironment. In such a case it may be necessary to heat the strip inorder to raise the temperature thereof above 32° F. (0° C.).

In addition to those combinations described above, there are otherembodiments of combinations in accordance with the present invention. Inone such embodiment, the processing step performed at 11 upstream ofsolid lubricant application procedure 12 comprises applying a metalcoating on the strip, and the processing step performed at 13 downstreamof lubricant application procedure 12 comprises coiling the strip. Inthis embodiment, the metal coating may comprise zinc, aluminum or alloysthereof applied by dipping the steel strip in a hot bath of moltenmetal. This embodiment will hereinafter be discussed principally in thecontext of zinc; however, such discussions are usually also applicableto aluminum and to alloys of zinc or aluminum, unless otherwiseindicated or apparent. In each such case, the lubricant is applied afterthe molten metal has solidified and the strip has cooled. The lubricantmay be applied in the form of a molten wax which is solid at roomtemperature or in the form of an aqueous solution.

When the lubricant is applied in the form of a molten wax, there is noheating step at 15, between the hot-dipping step at 11 and theapplication of the liquid lubricant at 16. This is because, at the timethe lubricant is applied in-line at 16, the strip temperature is usuallystill hot enough from the hot-dipping step at 11 to eliminate the needfor a heating step at 15. Generally, a strip, which has been coated withmetal by a hot-dipping procedure, is subjected to a cooling procedure aspart of the metal-coating operation. It is contemplated that thetemperature of the metal-coated steel strip at the end of thisconventional cooling procedure can be controlled, during that procedure,to provide the strip temperature desired at the time the lubricant isapplied at 16 as a molten wax. Then, after the molten wax has beenapplied at 16, the temperature of the strip is adjusted by chilling thestrip at 17 to a temperature substantially below the melting point ofthe wax, to rapidly solidify the wax before the strip is coiled at 13.

In some conventional strip processing methods in which the strip ishot-dip coated with zinc, the strip is subjected to a galvannealingstep, a conventional procedure in which, after coating, the strip isheated to a temperature at which (a) the zinc in the coating and (b) theiron in the steel strip alloy with each other. Such a processing methodcan be employed in combination with a lubricant application procedure 12in accordance with the present invention. In such a combination, thelubricant is applied after the galvannealing step. When the lubricant isapplied in the form of a molten wax which is solid at ambienttemperature, there is usually no heating step between the galvannealingstep, performed at 11, and the application of the lubricant at 16. Thisis because sufficient heat is usually retained in the strip from thegalvannealing step to eliminate the need for a separate heating step at15 prior to the application of the lubricant at 16.

The temperature of the galvannealed strip at the time the molten wax isapplied will probably be below the temperature at which the waxdegrades. If not, a chilling step will have to be performed at 15 priorto the application of the wax lubricant at 16. After the molten wax hasbeen applied at 16, the temperature of the strip is adjusted by chillingthe strip at 17, immediately after the lubricant material-applying step.This cools the strip to a temperature substantially below the meltingpoint of the wax and rapidly solidifies the wax before the strip iscoiled, all of this having been described above.

As noted above, when the strip is hot-dip coated with zinc or othermolten metal at 11, and lubricant is applied thereafter at 12, thelubricant may be applied in the form of an aqueous solution. In such acase, there is no heating step between the hot-dipping step performed at11 and the application of the lubricant at 16. This is because themetal-coated strip approaching station 16 is already at an elevatedtemperature which may even be above the decomposition temperature of thelubricant. In the latter case, the temperature of the strip is adjustedat 15 by chilling the strip, before the lubricant is applied at 16, to atemperature below the decomposition temperature of the lubricant but, ofcourse, above at least the freezing point of water.

Cooling at 15 can be controlled to conserve the heat carried over fromthe hot-dipping step and maintain a strip temperature above thevaporization temperature of water at the time the lubricant is appliedto the strip at 16. Applying the lubricant as an aqueous solution willfurther cool the steel strip. After the lubricant has been thus applied,the strip is heated at 17 to provide a strip temperature substantiallyabove the boiling point of water, but below the decompositiontemperature of the lubricant, to drive off the water from the aqueoussolution before the strip is coiled. In addition, because the lubricantis a polymer, the heating step should supply sufficient heat to cure thepolymer before the strip is coiled.

As noted above, when the zinc-coated strip is subjected to agalvannealing step at 11, the lubricant is applied after thegalvannealing step. This lubricant may be applied in the form of anaqueous solution, in which case there is no heating step between thegalvannealing step at 11 and the application of the lubricant at 16, forthe same reasons that there is no heating step prior to the applicationof the lubricant when the strip has been subjected to a hot-dip coatingstep. Similarly, the strip temperature may be adjusted at 15, before thelubricant is applied at 16, by chilling the metal-coated, galvannealedstrip to a temperature below the decomposition temperature of thelubricant but above at least the freezing point of water and preferablyabove the boiling point of water. In addition, the strip is heated at 17after the lubricant is applied at 16, to a temperature substantiallyabove the boiling point of water, but below the decompositiontemperature of the lubricant, to drive off the water from the aqueoussolution before the strip is coiled. Moreover, because the lubricant isa polymer, the heating step should supply sufficient heat to cure thepolymer before the strip is coiled.

The above-described heating and cooling steps, which are used when agalvannealing step is employed in combination with a solid lubricantapplication procedure, are applicable whether the galvannealing step isperformed on a strip coated with zinc by a hot-dipping procedure or byan electrolytic procedure. With either metal-coating procedure, thelubricant applied after the galvannealing step may be in the form of amolten wax or in the form of an aqueous solution.

In all of the combinations described above, the continuous steel stripis unwound from a coil at the beginning of the steel strip processingmethod,and it is rewound into a coil at the end of the steel stripprocessing method. As noted above, the strip speed during processingstep 13 downstream of lubricant application procedure 12 is synchronizedwith the strip speed of processing step 11 performed upstream of thelubricant application procedure. In addition, the strip speed duringsolid lubricant application procedure 12 is synchronized with the stripspeeds upstream and downstream of that procedure. When the steel stripprocessing method is performed on an inspection line or on a line wherethe strip is coated with a metal such as zinc, the strip speed is in therange 200-1000 ft./min (61-305 m/min.), for example. On a temper rollingline, the strip speed can be in the range 2,500-5,000 ft./min.(762-1,524 m/min.), for example. The strip speeds described above areexemplary of the strip speeds normally attained in (a) the steel stripprocessing method in the absence of (b) an in-line lubricant applicationprocedure; the combination of (a) and (b) in accordance with the presentinvention does not substantially diminish those strip speeds.

When the strip speed is in the range 2,500-5,000 ft./min (762-1,524m/min.), a solid lubricant is preferably applied using a procedurecalled curtain coating. A curtain coating procedure is a conventionaltechnique which employs a descending curtain of liquid lubricant (eithermolten wax or an aqueous solution), very much like a waterfall, and inwhich the flow rate of the descending curtain is very closelycontrolled.

Solid lubricants such as waxes which are not soluble in water cannot beapplied in the form of an aqueous solution. Such lubricants, however,are soluble in more volatile organic solvents such as chlorinated orfluorinated hydrocarbons or alcohols or ketones. In such a case, thedrying temperature, to which the solution is subjected to dry off theliquid carrier (i.e. the volatile organic solvent), would be less thanthe temperature employed to boil off water when the solution is aqueous.The drying temperature would, of course, depend upon the vaporizationtemperature of the liquid, organic solvent. This information can beobtained from standard handbooks. A drawback to the employment ofvolatile organic solvents is the need to employ suitable ventilation andcollection equipment to exhaust the volatile fumes.

When a wax lubricant is applied in the form of a solution, it is notnecessary to preheat the strip at 15; this is because the volatilesolvent can be driven off with much less heat than that required todrive off water from an aqueous solution of lubricant (as when apolymer-type lubricant is applied). A heating step is performed at 17 todrive off the volatile solvent. This heating step is controlled so thatthe resulting temperature of the solution and of the steel strip isbelow the decomposition temperature of the wax lubricant but above themelting point of the wax lubricant to assure distribution of the waxlubricant coating over the entire surface of the steel strip.

Unless otherwise indicated, whenever reference is made herein to "wax"or "wax type" with respect to solid lubricants, it is intended toinclude: wax lubricants per se; lubricant compositions in which aprincipal ingredient is a wax lubricant; lubricant compositions havingthermal characteristics which enable them to be applied and solidifiedin a manner similar to molten wax; and lubricant compositions havingsolute characteristics which enable them to be dissolved and applied toa steel strip in a manner similar to wax lubricant solutions.

Similarly, unless otherwise indicated, whenever reference is made hereinto "polymer" or "polymer-type" with respect to solid lubricants, it isintended to include: acrylic polymer lubricants; lubricant compositionsin which a principal ingredient is an acrylic polymer; and lubricantcompositions containing other polymers having solute and thermalcharacteristics which enable them to be applied, dried and cured in amanner similar to acrylic polymers.

The foregoing detailed description has been given for clearness ofunderstanding only, and no unnecessary limitations should be understoodtherefrom, as modifications will be obvious to those skilled in the art.

We claim:
 1. In combination, (a) a multi-stage steel strip processingline and (b) solid lubricant application equipment incorporated in-linewith said steel strip processing line between stages thereof, forapplying, to said steel strip, as alternatives, either a wax or polymermaterial, each of which forms a transparent film of solid lubricant onthe steel strip, wherein said strip-processing line comprises:anupstream processing stage comprising means for performing at least oneprocessing step at an upstream location; a downstream processing stagecomprising means for performing at least one processing step downstreamof the location of said upstream processing stage; means for moving saidsteel strip in a downstream direction during processing; said striphaving a strip speed at the upstream processing stage and a strip speedat the downstream processing stage; and means for synchronizing thespeed of the moving steel strip in said downstream processing stage withthe strip speed employed in said upstream processing stage; said striphaving a strip temperature as it undergoes processing; said lubricantapplication equipment being located in-line with said steelstrip-processing line, between said upstream and downstream processingstages; and wherein said lubricant application equipment comprises:meansfor providing said line with both (a) a capability for applying afilm-forming wax material, as a liquid, and (b) a capability forapplying a film-forming polymer material, as a liquid; said last-recitedmeans comprising means for applying one of said film-forming materials,as a liquid, to said moving steel strip while the other film-formingmaterial remains unapplied; said material-applying means comprisingmeans for applying, as alternatives, either said wax material or saidpolymer material; means for providing said line with a capability foradjusting the temperature of said moving steel strip upstream of saidmaterial-applying means; said means for providing said upstreamtemperature-adjusting capability comprising (i) a non-emission heatingmeans or (ii) a chilling means employing a refrigerated cooling medium,or having the capability of employing means (i) and (ii) alternatively;means for providing said line with a capability for adjusting thetemperature of said strip downstream of said material-applying means,using a non-emission heating means; means for providing said line with acapability for adjusting the temperature of said strip downstream ofsaid material-applying means, using a chilling means employing arefrigerated cooling medium; means for sensing the temperature of saidmoving steel strip upstream of said material-applying means; means foremploying said upstream temperature-adjusting capability selectively, inresponse to one of the following parameters, to subject said strip to(a) heating or (b) cooling or (c) neither (a) nor (b), said parameterscomprising (1) the particular film-forming material that is applied or(2) the upstream temperature that is sensed or (3) a combination of (1)and (2); means for sensing the temperature of said moving steel stripdownstream of said material-applying means; means for adjusting thetemperature of said moving steel strip downstream of saidmaterial-applying means either (a) by using said non-emission heatingmeans while said chilling means remains unemployed or (b) by using saidchilling means while said non-emission heating means remains unemployed;and means for synchronizing the speed of said moving steel strip in saidlubricant application equipment with the strip speed employed in saidstrip-processing stages without substantially diminishing the speednormally attained in said strip-processing stages in the absence of theapplication of said lubricant, said normally-attained speed being atleast 200 ft./min. (61 m/min.); the operations performed by saidmaterial-applying and temperature-adjusting means taking time toperform; said speed-synchronizing means comprising means for limitingthe time available for the operations performed by saidmaterial-applying and temperature-adjusting means; saidmaterial-applying means and said temperature-adjusting means eachcomprising means for constraining the performance thereof, toaccommodate to the time limitations imposed by said speed-synchronizingmeans; said means for constraining the performance of saidtemperature-adjusting means comprising one or more of said non-emissionheating means and said chilling means.
 2. The combination of claim 1wherein:the space for employing said lubricant application equipmentin-line with said strip processing stages is limited by the space whichwas available between the locations of said upstream and downstreamprocessing stages before said combination; said material applying meansand said temperature-adjusting means each comprising means forconstraining the performance thereof, to accommodate to saidspace-limitation.
 3. The combination of any of claims 1 or 2 whereinsaid means for constraining the performance of said material applyingmeans comprises one of the following means:a three roll, reverse rollcoating means; a two roll, forward roll coating means; an electrostaticspraying means; an air assisted spraying means; an airless sprayingmeans; and a curtain coating means.
 4. The combination of any of claims1 or 2 wherein:said upstream processing stage comprises a temper rollingstage; and said downstream processing stage comprises a coiling stage.5. In combination, (a) a multi-stage steel strip processing line and (b)solid lubricant application equipment incorporated in-line with saidsteel strip processing line between stages thereof, for applying, tosaid steel strip, as alternatives, either a wax or polymer material,each of which forms a transparent film of solid lubricant on the steelstrip, wherein said strip-processing line comprises:an upstreamprocessing stage comprising means for performing at least one processingstep at an upstream location; a downstream processing stage comprisingmeans for performing at least one processing step downstream of thelocation of said upstream processing stage; means for moving said steelstrip in a downstream direction during processing; said strip having astrip speed at the upstream processing stage and a strip speed at thedownstream processing stage; and means for synchronizing the speed ofthe moving steel strip in said downstream processing stage with thestrip speed employed in said upstream processing stage; said striphaving a strip temperature as it undergoes processing; said lubricantapplication equipment being located in-line with said steelstrip-processing line, between said upstream and downstream processingstages; and wherein said lubricant application equipment comprises:meansfor providing said line with both (a) a capability for applying afilm-forming wax material, as a liquid, and (b) a capability forapplying a film-forming polymer material, as a liquid; said last-recitedmeans comprising means for applying one of said film-forming materials,as a liquid, to said moving steel strip while the other film-formingmaterial remains unapplied; said material-applying means comprisingmeans for applying, as alternatives, either said wax material or saidpolymer material; means for providing said line with a capability foradjusting the temperature of said moving steel strip upstream of saidmaterial-applying means; said means for providing said upstreamtemperature-adjusting capability comprising (i) heating means or (ii)cooling means or having the capability of employing means (i) and (ii)alternatively; means for providing said line with a capability foradjusting the temperature of said strip downstream of saidmaterial-applying means, using heating means; means for providing saidline with a capability for adjusting the temperature of said stripdownstream of said material-applying means, using cooling means; meansfor sensing the temperature of said moving steel strip upstream of saidmaterial-applying means; means for employing said upstreamtemperature-adjusting capability selectively, in response to one of thefollowing parameters, to subject said strip to (a) heating or (b)cooling or (c) neither (a) nor (b), said parameters comprising (1) theparticular film-forming material that is applied or (2) the upstreamtemperature that is sensed or (3) a combination of (1) and (2); meansfor sensing the temperature of said moving steel strip downstream ofsaid material-applying means; means for adjusting the temperature ofsaid moving steel strip downstream of said material-applying meanseither (a) by using said heating means while said cooling means remainsunemployed or (b) by using said cooling means while said heating meansremains unemployed; and means for synchronizing the speed of said movingsteel strip in said lubricant application equipment with the strip speedemployed in said strip-processing stages.